Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness Quotes
Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
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Miya Tokumitsu499 ratings, 3.92 average rating, 91 reviews
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Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness Quotes
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“Maybe anyone can do what he or she loves, but only the wealthy can avoid going into debt to pay for it.”
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
“Do what you love allows us to valorize elite workers, those who choose to overwork, and ignore those who have to overwork.”
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
“Passion is all too often a cover for overwork cloaked in the rhetoric of self-fulfillment.”
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
“As long as our well-being depends on income, and income, for most depends on work, love will always be secondary...”
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
“The entry-level job...is on its way to becoming an antiquity.”
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
“when we are most resolutely disengaged from the public sphere—when we are sleeping—our numerous social media profiles, “our patchwork of surrogate identities,” now stand in as our waking avatars, projecting our photographs and opinions, receiving “likes” and comments.11”
― Do What You Love: And Other Lies About Success & Happiness
― Do What You Love: And Other Lies About Success & Happiness
“Lovable work is visible work. The question of who gets a public platform as a worker and who does not is neatly side-stepped by Jobs’s narrative. What do those in the invisible workforce call themselves in their social media profiles? What kinds of identities are available to them? These questions are critical because, as Jonathan Crary notes in his recent book, 24/7: Late Capitalism and the Ends of Sleep, while the notion of identity is bound up with public visibility, today that public exposure has become detached from communal forms that once provided safekeeping and care. Crary notes that in the always-on, 24/7 temporality in which we now live, the pressure to be constantly consuming or producing necessitates a constant presence in the public sphere, specifically in the marketplace.”
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
“I have argued elsewhere that DWYL is an essentially narcissistic schema, facilitating willful ignorance of working conditions of others by encouraging continuous self-gratification. I have also argued that DWYL exposes its adherents to exploitation, justifying unpaid or underpaid work by throwing workers’ motivations back at them; when passion becomes the socially accepted motivation for working, talk of wages or reasonable scheduling becomes crass. This book examines the many expectations about what work can provide under the DWYL creed, and the sacrifices that workers make in order to meet those expectations.”
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
“Today's ideal worker is not the anonymous shift worker but the enlightened genius who never stops working.”
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
― Do What You Love and Other Lies About Success and Happiness
